US7173662B1 - Foveating imaging system and method employing a spatial light modulator to selectively modulate an input image - Google Patents
Foveating imaging system and method employing a spatial light modulator to selectively modulate an input image Download PDFInfo
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- US7173662B1 US7173662B1 US09/845,809 US84580901A US7173662B1 US 7173662 B1 US7173662 B1 US 7173662B1 US 84580901 A US84580901 A US 84580901A US 7173662 B1 US7173662 B1 US 7173662B1
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- input image
- spatial light
- light modulator
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N5/00—Details of television systems
- H04N5/74—Projection arrangements for image reproduction, e.g. using eidophor
- H04N5/7416—Projection arrangements for image reproduction, e.g. using eidophor involving the use of a spatial light modulator, e.g. a light valve, controlled by a video signal
- H04N5/7425—Projection arrangements for image reproduction, e.g. using eidophor involving the use of a spatial light modulator, e.g. a light valve, controlled by a video signal the modulator being a dielectric deformable layer controlled by an electron beam, e.g. eidophor projector
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- the invention relates to imaging systems, and in particular relates to systems in which images are recorded for electronic processing.
- CMOS phototransistor array For example, as shown in FIG. 1 , a conventional imaging system 10 may include an array 12 of image recording elements 14 , each of which receives a portion 16 of an image. Devices incorporating such arrays are used for a variety of purposes, including cameras, scanners, monitoring equipment, and robotic vision systems etc.
- the resolution of the recorded image depends on the number and size of elements in the array. Although high resolution imaging systems are preferred for certain applications requiring detailed images, high resolution imaging systems generally require more time and memory to capture, process, and transfer the images, than required by lower resolution imaging systems.
- an image may include a human face in the foreground and a statue and sky in the background.
- the human face may include a relatively large amount of detail, the statue less, and the sky may include the least amount of detail.
- Certain processing systems such as file transfer systems, identify the areas of less detail, and compress the data required to represent the image by identifying large contiguous groups of picture elements that are the same as one another. For example, if a portion of an image includes a large number of picture elements that are repetitious, e.g., blue sky, then a single value is identified as applying to the appropriate number of picture elements, instead of representing each of the identical picture elements with separate but equal values.
- the invention provides an imaging system for receiving images.
- the system includes an image receiving unit for receiving an input image, and a spatial light modulator.
- the spatial light modulator is interposed between the image receiving unit and an input image.
- the spatial light modulator is for selectively modulating the input image such that at least one portion of the input image may be blurred as it passes through the spatial light modulator toward the image receiving unit.
- the spatial light modulator includes an array of birefringent elements, and in another embodiment of the invention, the spatial light modulator includes a liquid crystal cell.
- FIG. 1 shows an illustrative view of a prior art imaging system
- FIG. 2 shows an illustrative view of an imaging system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention
- FIG. 3 shows an illustrative view of an imaging system in accordance with another embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 4 shows an illustrative view of an imaging system in accordance with a further embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 5 shows an illustrative diagrammatic view of the operation of a system of the invention
- FIGS. 6–8 show illustrative views of imaging systems in accordance with further embodiments of the invention.
- FIG. 9 shows an illustrative view of an interferrometric imaging system incorporating an imaging system of the invention.
- FIG. 10 shows an illustrative view of a holographic imaging system incorporating an imaging system of the invention.
- a system 20 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention includes an array of birefringent elements 22 fabricated on top of a standard optical detector array 24 (e.g., a CMOS camera or CCD array). By selectively applying voltage to the birefringent elements, the user may effect space-variant filtering functions.
- Applications include non-mechanical foveation, multi-resolution visual processing, monocular depth perception, and modular volume holography, etc.
- Foveation relates to an attention-like function that permits a vision system to capture the more interesting aspects of the environment while maintaining low information bandwidth. These functions contribute to the solution of significant problems in robotics and other artificial intelligence applications.
- Systems of the invention generally simulate the retinal function of the human eye that not only captures images, but also acts as a filter so that more detail is captured in some areas than in other areas. For example, retinal cells with lateral connections edge-enhance, and intensity-equalize the retinal images. Most of these operations contribute to a reduction of visual information from the approximately 250 ⁇ 10 6 retinal detectors (rods and cones) to the approximately 1 ⁇ 10 6 neuronal fibers that comprise the optic nerve. The detectors themselves are distributed in an information-efficient way.
- Densely distributed cones are found at the fovea, which is a small circular path surrounding the intersection of the retina with the optic axis of the eyeball; this is the area where the optical quality of the retinal images is best, and it also matches the direction of the subject's gaze.
- Peripheral retinal areas are more sparsely populated by rods, which are sensitive only to the intensity of the light and not the color.
- the retinal detector distribution together with eye motion serve as the hardware implementation of the cognitive function of attention.
- the gaze is fixed toward the direction where the subject intends to direct his or her attention, and high-resolution imaging is obtained in that area.
- Low-resolution peripheral vision serves bottom-up attention, which allows subjects to redirect their cognitive resources to new objects of interest.
- Attention is Nature's solution to a computational dilemma—it reduces the degrees of freedom of sensory signals so as to maintain at any given instant in time the most important information.
- the mechanism of visual attention in humans is not completely understood, but the physiology of the retina strongly supports the hypothesis that the sensory architecture of the human visual system is well tuned to attentional processing. This observation strongly suggests that attention-like mechanisms might enhance the computational capabilities of computers in contexts such as robotics and combinatorial algorithms. In short, attention algorithms make more efficient use of the hardware capabilities of a given computational structure.
- the present invention provides a system that permits the implementation of arbitrarily variable resolution across the aperture of an imaging system, and allows the shift of the attentional focus to be implemented non-mechanically, which reduces the failure probability and maintenance costs and may also be beneficial for certain applications, such as security monitoring.
- systems of the invention may be used for other related applications such as monocular depth perception, nonlinear image processing, and real-time image filter-banks. Also, systems of the invention may be used to permit selective blurring in areas specified by an image compression algorithm
- a system of the invention includes an array 22 of tunable birefringent cells superimposed over an array 24 of optical detectors.
- Liquid crystal cells may be used for the tunable birefringent cell array (TBCA).
- optical detector arrays are CCD arrays and CMOS photo-transistor arrays.
- the first split part, e.g., 28 propagates undeviated through the cell to the associated detector cell.
- the second part, e.g., 30 referred to as extra-ordinary beam, splits apart from the ordinary beam, and is deflected by an amount that depends on the birefringent characteristics of the material.
- the angle of deflection of the extra-ordinary beam is set by the indices of refraction along the principal axes of the material, and the orientation of the system of principal axes.
- electro-optic materials such as liquid crystals, the principal axes change their orientation in response to externally-applied electric fields.
- the amount of deflection of the extra-ordinary ray is set individually in each cell by voltages applied to transparent electrodes attached to the cells. Therefore, the invention allows the user to specify variable amounts of deviation across the field of view of the device such that a certain area, e.g., the area indicated at 32 , may record image data with a higher resolution than that of the remaining portions of the device. Moreover, certain of the birefringent cells may be turned off, so that only one beam (the ordinary beam) is passed through the cells as shown, for example, at 34 in FIG. 2 .
- multiple arrays of birefringent elements 42 , 44 may be employed.
- the ordinary beams, e.g, 46 , and extra-ordinary beams, e.g., 48 encounter one or more further arrays such as array 44 of similar tunable birefringent cell arrangements, each effecting further splitting of the original ray into another ordinary beam, e.g., 50 , and extra-ordinary beam, e.g., 52 .
- the cell axes By selecting the cell axes to be in the appropriate orientations, multiple splitting may occur in-plane, as shown in FIG. 3 , as well as in the perpendicular direction.
- each entering ray Upon exiting the m th layer of an m-layer stack, the optical power contained in each entering ray is split into N parts where 2 ⁇ N ⁇ 2 m . If the angular deviations are sufficiently large, then each of the extraordinary beams is incident on a different cell of the detector array. This diffusion of optical power among neighboring cells is equivalent to a low-pass filtering (blurring) operation effected by the tunable birefringent elements.
- Each TBCA layer introduces a spill-over of some pixel energy from pixel (x j , y j ) to one or more neighboring pixels (x j+p , y j+q ) in the next layer, where p, and q are integers that depend on the state of the (x j , y j ) cell at the original layer.
- g ( x,y ) ⁇ f ( x′,y′ ) h ( x,y;x′,y′ ) dx′dy′
- g(x,y) is the actual filtered image forming on the detector plane
- h(x,y;x′,y′) is a shift variant kernal defined by the TBCA. Note that if all of the cells within each layer are set to the same birefringent state, then the filter becomes shift-invariant, and the above equation becomes a convolution.
- a significant benefit of the present invention is that it enables the implementation of arbitrary, not necessarily shift-invariant filters that may be adapted in real time to perform real-time image processing operations.
- the class of implementable filters is limited to positive definite operators, i.e., h(x,y;x′,y′) is constrained to be a positive-definite operator.
- Coherent illumination permits the implementation of additional further general complex-valued filters.
- the above filter essentially provides a method for adaptively interconnecting pixels of the same image, and is believed to provide benefits (such as cost benefits) over electronic interconnects that may implement shift-variant filters.
- Optical interconnects using holograms have also been used extensively in research and offer extremely high interconnect capacity and adaptability. Such adaptive operation, however, generally comes at the expense of optical power because the diffraction efficiency of holograms is typically well below 100%.
- Real-time holography hardware is also relatively bulky, sensitive to vibration, and expensive to realize in industrial or outdoors environments.
- FIG. 4 a single large liquid-crystal cell 50 is surrounded by an array of electrodes 52 .
- an electric field distribution is created in the interior of the cell 50 .
- the distribution is found by solving Poisson's equation for the potential in the cell interior, with the electrode voltages as boundary conditions; the inverse problem of determining the electrode voltages that give a particular field distribution inside the cell is more difficult.
- the disclosed invention may be used to implement top-down and bottom-up attention with non-mechanical foveation by implementing the feedback loop shown in FIG. 5 .
- the multi-layer TCBA is implementing a shift variant filter 60 that may be represented as h i (x,y;x′,y′).
- the high-resolution information from the attentional focus is interesting to higher-level cognitive processing functions.
- the top-down attentional algorithm 62 will typically attempt to maintain the focus at its current location or move it according to its own primitives.
- peripheral information (which is typically at low resolution) often signifies abrupt changes that can be critical for the performance of the robot or its own survival. For example, abrupt motion may signify a sudden threat.
- Low-level (bottom-up) attentional processing routines 64 evaluate the significance of peripheral information and compete with the top-down routines for the filter function h i+1 (x,y;x′,y′) at the next time step.
- a controller algorithm 66 synthesizes both processing algorithms 62 and 64 . Interesting dynamics are obtained if the two attentional mechanisms are not returning their results concurrently.
- a system 70 in accordance with another embodiment of the invention may provide a relatively small area of high resolution 72 , another area of less resolution 74 , a further area of even less resolution 76 , and the remaining area of the least resolution 78 . As shown in FIG. 6 ,
- another embodiment 80 of the invention provides a relatively large area of resolution 82 , another area of less resolution 84 , a further area of even less resolution 86 , with the remaining area providing the least amount of resolution 88 .
- a further still embodiment 90 provides multiple foci 92 of high resolution, multiple areas of less resolution 94 , multiple areas of even less resolution 96 , with remaining areas providing the least amount of resolution 98 .
- the disclosed device may be combined with a depth-sensitive optical system to provide monocular depth perception over an extended field of view.
- Depth-sensitive optical methods such as chirp-shear interferometry and volume holographic imaging may be developed.
- depth perception is complicated by the lateral content of the images, particularly if the depth variation within the field of view is relatively large.
- the disclosed invention permits arbitrary allocation and width of the field of view where the depth is measured; the remainder of the system's natural field of view is blurred, eliminating spurious information. This narrow depth-sensitive focus is then scanned to obtain depth information over the entire natural field of view of the system.
- An example of a system 100 of the invention employed to provide monocular depth perception in this mode is shown in FIG.
- the modulator 106 may provide areas of varying resolution 110 , 112 and 114 as shown with area 110 proving the highest resolution and the area 114 providing the least resolution respectively.
- a further application of the invention is the use of the non-mechanical fovea to create an adaptive volume hologram as shown in FIG. 10 in which volume holographic elements 120 are interspersed with spatial light modulators 122 of the invention.
- the preferred method of illumination is with a coherent source.
- Volume holography has been used for data storage, artificial neural networks, and, recently, for imaging. The information stored in a volume hologram is typically addressed by changing some property of the readout beam, e.g. the angle or location of incidence or the wavelength. Stratified (multi-layered) volume holograms have also been implemented.
- the non-mechanical fovea may be used to enable a new mode of reading out stratified volume holograms by changing the path of the optical fields as they propagate a multi-layer structure, as shown in FIG. 10 .
- each volume holographic layer may be considered one stage of processing the information.
- the intermediate non-mechanical foveas generate coherent superpositions of multiple states of the interaction between the input field and the information stored in the hologram.
- the resulting structure may lead to powerful new optical processing paradigms, since it is essentially an adaptive volume hologram without the stability and power-consumption requirements of conventional structures.
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Description
g(x,y)=∫∫f(x′,y′)h(x,y;x′,y′)dx′dy′
where g(x,y) is the actual filtered image forming on the detector plane, and h(x,y;x′,y′) is a shift variant kernal defined by the TBCA. Note that if all of the cells within each layer are set to the same birefringent state, then the filter becomes shift-invariant, and the above equation becomes a convolution. A significant benefit of the present invention is that it enables the implementation of arbitrary, not necessarily shift-invariant filters that may be adapted in real time to perform real-time image processing operations. For incoherent illumination, however, the class of implementable filters is limited to positive definite operators, i.e., h(x,y;x′,y′) is constrained to be a positive-definite operator. Coherent illumination, on the other hand, permits the implementation of additional further general complex-valued filters.
Claims (15)
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US09/845,809 US7173662B1 (en) | 2001-04-30 | 2001-04-30 | Foveating imaging system and method employing a spatial light modulator to selectively modulate an input image |
PCT/US2002/005581 WO2002089471A1 (en) | 2001-04-30 | 2002-02-26 | Foveating imaging system and method |
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US09/845,809 US7173662B1 (en) | 2001-04-30 | 2001-04-30 | Foveating imaging system and method employing a spatial light modulator to selectively modulate an input image |
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US7173662B1 true US7173662B1 (en) | 2007-02-06 |
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Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20040135898A1 (en) * | 2001-06-06 | 2004-07-15 | Andrew Zador | Imaging system utilizing spatial image oscillation |
CN110045510A (en) * | 2018-09-28 | 2019-07-23 | 北京理工大学 | A kind of recessed stereo imaging system of double small |
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2001
- 2001-04-30 US US09/845,809 patent/US7173662B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
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2002
- 2002-02-26 WO PCT/US2002/005581 patent/WO2002089471A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
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Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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US20040135898A1 (en) * | 2001-06-06 | 2004-07-15 | Andrew Zador | Imaging system utilizing spatial image oscillation |
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CN110045510A (en) * | 2018-09-28 | 2019-07-23 | 北京理工大学 | A kind of recessed stereo imaging system of double small |
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WO2002089471A1 (en) | 2002-11-07 |
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